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Garden of Evil

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A rural upstate Florida sheriff is shot to death by a young woman who flees in his car and continues to kill. The victims, men lured into sexual confrontations by the wild and predatory young woman, are found dumped in ditches, woodlands, and along the roadside. The flirtatious killer, who leaves lipstick traces on the bullets she uses, is swiftly dubbed the Kiss Me Killer by the press. In Miami, Britt Montero, fascinated by the story, suspects the elusive killer is headed her way. She's right. A top Miami politician soon tastes the killer's kiss of death. In the media frenzy that follows, the story belongs to Britt and quick reader reaction comes from the killer herself. The mutual fascination between reporter and killer leads to a face-to-face meeting that turns deadly...
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 1, 1999
      Miami crime reporter Britt Montero (Margin of Error, etc.) endures a heat wave and much worse when some apparently unrelated stories converge. When a woman claims to Britt that she's a hit man's target, she's perceived at first as lonely, then as paranoid; a headless man smashes up a car during a shootout when his lifeless foot jams on the accelerator. That's all in a day's work for Britt, but then a female serial killer roars onto the scene. Keppie's M.O.: two shots delivered to near naked, post-coitus males, lipstick traces on exploding shells, stolen cars and purloined credit cards. Britt is on the story, and the pretty killer, enamored of her press clippings, takes an interest in the reporter--who, not being one to turn down a chance at good copy, consents when the cops hatch a plan to catch Keppie by using Britt as bait. Of course, the plan goes awry and Britt finds herself in a car with the murderer and a frightened young boy, driving across the Sunshine State. In addition to winding up on the wrong end of a pistol-whipping from the slinky Keppie, Britt helplessly witnesses the killer practice her craft and gets caught up in a televised, O.J. Simpson-like car chase. Throughout, Buchanan sustains a feverish pace with hyper-fast cuts between major and minor plot lines. Although the resolution is relegated to an emotionless kind of narrative postscript, Keppie, a long-legged mankiller with a family secret and guile to spare, will easily command the attention of Buchanan's fans. Meanwhile, Britt herself, tough yet tender, remains a solid enough character to retain readers' interest despite the hyperbolic escapades Buchanan subjects her to in this over-the-top tale.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Fields is the voice of Britt Montero, investigative reporter for the MIAMI HERALD. She's tough, headstrong, smart, sexy and (surprise) maternal. Here she gets kidnapped by the Kiss Me Killer (female), whose specialty is post-coital murder. One of her victims leaves a small son whom Britt must protect. Fields treats us to impersonations of the snarling killer, Britt with a nosebleed, the scared child, and a host of minor characters. The car chase is just one of many tense scenes that call for split-second timing. A subplot involving the stalking of an ex-Orange Bowl Queen requires sensitivity. Fields is up to the challenge. She's had some practice; this is her third Montero adventure for BOT. J.B.G. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      A rural cop-killing begins a series of sex-related murders that attract the astute attention of Miami crime reporter Britt Montero--the single, sexy heroine of several popular thrillers. Narrator Caruso has an irritating mannerism: She attacks a sequence with too much volume and dwindles into a barely audible mumble until she runs out of breath. This is easily fixed electronically, but the publishers have chosen not to do so. Aside from this and a few misinterpreted lines, she does a workmanlike, albeit uninspired, job. Y.R. (c) AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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